There is no adjective.
Jack's
Verbs are the words that tell what the subject is or is doing.Adverbs are the words that modify (give more information about) a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Adjectives are the words that describe nouns.Nouns are the words for a person, a place, or a thing.A sentence is a group of words that convey a complete thought. A sentence requires a subject and a verb, but a sentence can have many parts.A subject (the person or thing that the sentence is about) can be a noun or a pronoun.Examples:Jack drove. (the noun 'Jack' is the subject, the sentence is about him; the verb is 'drove', what he did)Jack drove today. (the adverb 'today' gives more information about the verb)Jack drove home. (the noun 'home' is the direct object of the verb 'drove')Jack drove too fast. (the adjective 'fast' describes how he drove; the adverb 'too' gives more information about the adjective)Jack drove a car. (the noun 'car' is the object of the verb 'drove')Jack drove a new car. (the adjective 'new' describes the car)
Only by using the possessive form, which is Jack's.
Jack Frost is nipping at your nose!
Fake can be: an adjective -- That is a fake diamond a verb -- He faked the report and got away with it. a noun -- Jack's a real fake
preposition
we carve jack o lanterns because stingy jack tricked the devil into going to hell and the smile is to represent jack's smile when he did
Jack's
A comparative form is used to compare two things, showing the degree of difference between them. It is typically formed by adding -er to the end of an adjective (e.g., "bigger") or by using the words "more" or "less" before the adjective (e.g., "more interesting").
Verbs are the words that tell what the subject is or is doing.Adverbs are the words that modify (give more information about) a verb, an adjective, or another adverb.Adjectives are the words that describe nouns.Nouns are the words for a person, a place, or a thing.A sentence is a group of words that convey a complete thought. A sentence requires a subject and a verb, but a sentence can have many parts.A subject (the person or thing that the sentence is about) can be a noun or a pronoun.Examples:Jack drove. (the noun 'Jack' is the subject, the sentence is about him; the verb is 'drove', what he did)Jack drove today. (the adverb 'today' gives more information about the verb)Jack drove home. (the noun 'home' is the direct object of the verb 'drove')Jack drove too fast. (the adjective 'fast' describes how he drove; the adverb 'too' gives more information about the adjective)Jack drove a car. (the noun 'car' is the object of the verb 'drove')Jack drove a new car. (the adjective 'new' describes the car)
"Jack doesn't know John or where his sister lives."The pronoun is the possessive adjective 'his', but we don't know if it describes the sister of Jack or the sister of John. This is called an 'unclear pronoun antecedent reference'. In other words, the antecedent can't be determined by the wording of the sentence.
No, the word 'larger' is the comparative form of the adjective large (larger, largest). An adjective is a word used to describe a noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:"Jack got a larger bicycle for his birthday. He gave his old bicycle to his smaller cousin."The pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Jack' in the second sentence.The adjective 'larger' describes the noun 'bicycle'.
The word 'after' is not a pronoun.The word 'after' is a preposition, an adjective, and a conjunction.Examples:We can take a walk after lunch. (preposition)I'm meeting my after school study group. (adjective)Jack is stopping by after he gets off work. (conjunction)A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.Example: Jack is stopping by after he gets off work. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'Jack' in the second part of the sentence)
adjective -adjective is a word that describes, or modifies, a noun.It usually precedes the noun it modifies and answers the questionwhich one, what kind, or how many. Ex The Tall Tree.
Jack McCall
In the sentence "The car needed a new battery and Jack was broke", there is no adverb.The sentence can be separated into two independent clauses. "The car needed a new battery" and "Jack was broke".First independent clause:The - articlecar - nounneeded - verba - articlenew - adjectivebattery - nounSecond independent clause:Jack - nounwas - linking verbbroke - predicate adjective
Jack Dash is the author of Good Morning Brothers